When you catch yourself building a complicated case for staying bearish, that's probably your signal to flip bullish. Same goes the other way around. The trades that actually work? They're usually the obvious ones. Everything else is just you gambling in the fog trying to sound smart.
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BearMarketBuilder
· 22h ago
This logic sounds right, but I feel like I'm constantly oscillating between "claiming to have found an obvious opportunity" and "actually just gambling."
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FundingMartyr
· 12-05 20:13
Damn, isn't this just my daily routine? The more I overthink, the more complicated it gets, and the more mistakes I make.
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MissedTheBoat
· 12-05 20:08
Ha, that's just my daily routine... The more convincing the reason, the easier it is to lose money.
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RugPullAlarm
· 12-05 19:59
The more you mess around with complicated logic, the more it shows you're gambling. On-chain data is straightforward—don't overthink it.
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GasFeeNightmare
· 12-05 19:58
That's so true. The more you make up stories and brag about how smart you are, the more you end up losing.
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HalfIsEmpty
· 12-05 19:51
Yeah, it's blunt but true; excessive justification is often just lying to yourself.
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GasGoblin
· 12-05 19:46
That's quite right, but it's really hard to execute.
When you catch yourself building a complicated case for staying bearish, that's probably your signal to flip bullish. Same goes the other way around. The trades that actually work? They're usually the obvious ones. Everything else is just you gambling in the fog trying to sound smart.